Transcript
Page 1: Behavioral Adaptations

Behavioral AdaptationsWhat are they????

Page 2: Behavioral Adaptations

What are behavioral adaptation???

0 Behavioral adaptations are still “adaptations”, they just differ from physical adaptations because they are behaviors that animals take on to keep them alive.

0 Physical adaptations are parts of an animal’s body which help them survive- behavioral adaptations are “actions” an animal exhibits.

0 Both are adaptations which are intended to help keep the animal alive.

Page 3: Behavioral Adaptations

Just think….0What could be the result of an

animal NOT having behavioral adaptations?

Page 4: Behavioral Adaptations

Instincts….0What are instincts?

0 Instincts are BEHAVIORS that an animal is born knowing to do.

0 Instincts are examples of BEHAVIORAL ADAPTATIONS.

Page 5: Behavioral Adaptations

Spider webs

Page 6: Behavioral Adaptations

Spiders0 Spiders begin life knowing how to spin webs and catch

prey- they are not taught by their parents- this is an instinct, which is also a behavioral adaptation.

0 How are spider webs examples of behavioral adaptations?

0 How does this adaptation help spiders survive?

0 How do spiders use this adaptation to capture their prey and feed?

Page 7: Behavioral Adaptations

How is this a behavioral adaptation?

Page 8: Behavioral Adaptations

Smart thinking…0Zebras know that living and traveling

together in herds protect them from predators…..This is an instinct….which is also a behavioral adaptation.

0How does this living arrangement protect the zebras and help tem survive longer?

Page 9: Behavioral Adaptations

Who made these?????

Page 10: Behavioral Adaptations
Page 11: Behavioral Adaptations

They did… the Weaverbird

Page 12: Behavioral Adaptations

The Weaverbird..*How do the Weaverbirds know how to weaver these nests?

*Is the Weaverbird’s nest an example of an instinct?

Why or why not?

Is this an example of a behavioral adaptation?

Page 13: Behavioral Adaptations

What is going on here?

Page 14: Behavioral Adaptations

Hibernation…0What is hibernation?

0Hibernation is when animals enter into shelters and enter into an inactive, dormant state.

0What does this mean?0The animals are certainly still alive- but their

bodies have in a way “shut down” for winter.

Page 15: Behavioral Adaptations

Hibernation 0Why is hibernation an important behavioral

adaptation for animals?

0 In what areas would animals use hibernation as a behavioral adaptation?

Page 16: Behavioral Adaptations

How are animals able to survive hibernation?

0 Where winters are very cold, by instinct, they know how to get ready for winter.

0 They begin to eat more food than normal, gaining fat on their bodies.

0 They then build dens or find shelters (underground)

0 When the days get shorter and colder, the animal moves into its underground den or shelter and enter a dormant and inactive state

0 This pretty much means that they sleep for the remaining wintertime.

Page 17: Behavioral Adaptations

What????0 The animal’s heart barely beats during hibernation

0 Breathing almost stops during hibernation

0 The body temperature of the animal drops to just above freezing. ( our normal body temperature is 98.6 degrees F- freezing is 32 degrees F)

0 Since the body is barely working, the animal does not use as much energy and the animal does not need to eat.

0 During the time of the overeating, there is enough stores fat in the animal’s body to keep it alive during winter.

Page 18: Behavioral Adaptations

However, in the springtime…

0 In the springtime, the hibernating animals “wake up” and they are HUNGRY and very thin.

Page 19: Behavioral Adaptations

Animals that hibernate….

Page 20: Behavioral Adaptations

Woodchucks0 A woodchucks digs a winter burrow. 0 Its body temperature drops from 97 degrees F to 46

degrees F!

Page 21: Behavioral Adaptations

Bats0 A bat’s normal heartbeat is 400 beats per minute. 0 During hibernation, a bat’s heartbeat drops to 11

beats per minute.

Page 22: Behavioral Adaptations

FrogsMany male frogs hibernate t the bottom of ponds while the female and young frogs hibernate in dens on land.

Page 23: Behavioral Adaptations

What Other animals hibernate?

Page 24: Behavioral Adaptations

badger

Page 25: Behavioral Adaptations

Bees, chipmunks, earthworms

Page 26: Behavioral Adaptations

Lemur, hedgehogs, lizards

Page 27: Behavioral Adaptations

Snakes, skunks, snails

Page 28: Behavioral Adaptations

One more behavioral adaptation…

0Migration….0 What is migration?

0 Migration is a behavioral adaptation where a GROUP of animals move to one region and then come back to where they started at.

0 Why would animals migrate?

0 To find better climates (such as during the winter) or to places where there is more food.

Page 29: Behavioral Adaptations

Migration0Why is migration considered a behavioral adaptation?

0Is migration an instinct?

0What animals migrate?

Page 30: Behavioral Adaptations

Humpback Whales

Page 31: Behavioral Adaptations

Humpback whales0 Humpback whales travel over 3,100 miles a season!

0 They birth their young in warm waters in the winter and then migrate (travel in pods) to cold polar waters in the summer to feed.

0 They travel nearly 1,000 miles per month.

Page 32: Behavioral Adaptations

The Arctic Tern

Page 33: Behavioral Adaptations

The Arctic Tern0 The Arctic Tern travels farther than ANY other

migrating animal.

0 In the summer, it breeds in the Arctic Circle (right on top of Earth)

0 In the fall, it migrates to the Antarctic ice packs (on the bottom of earth!)

0 The Arctic Tern travels almost 18,000 kilometers in its migratory path!

Page 34: Behavioral Adaptations

Arctic Tern Migratory Path

Page 35: Behavioral Adaptations

Caribou0Caribou spend the winters in forests in

Northern Canada.

0 In early Spring, they move north.

Page 36: Behavioral Adaptations

Sandpiper- long nonstop journey

0The Sandpiper spends summers in Eastern Canada, but in winter, it flies NONSTOP over the Atlantic Ocean to South America.

Page 37: Behavioral Adaptations

EQ’s


Top Related